Hillary Clinton has now been edited out by 2 Hasidic news outlets. One claimed because she could be “sexually suggestive” and the other due to “laws of modesty”. So is this the birth of Hillary the sex symbol? Not likely.

Hillary

Hillary - DonkeyHotey(CC)


There is already a sex symbol in the Clinton marriage and she ain’t it. Bill Clinton was elected in large part because of his charisma, and as the multitude of dalliances we know all about means he had that way with more than his share of ladies.  Ladies love him, men want to be him. That is the definition of a male sex symbol.

Hillary on the other hand has  almost no sex appeal at all. “Almost no” may be even giving her the benefit of the doubt. Did it hurt her in the last election? Well she may be in the Situation Room, but she is not in the Oval Office. Enough said on that.

As a fellow blogger has told me over and over again, politics is all about sex. Like it or not she is right. We make decisions both consciously and unconsciously all the time based on sexual criteria.

I understand religious practices, modesty, and the like but I do not condone the photo-shopping of history. I just have a hard time believing anyone could find Hillary sexually suggestive. I am not sure even her husband does. She may be many things, but sex symbol she is not. Do not use the photo if you are afraid Hasidic boys could be hiding Hillary pics under their mattress. They would be the only ones, ever I would guess.

We have all heard by now that Osama Bin Laden was hiding in plain sight in Abbottabad, Pakistan, but I do not think the media coverage has adequately introduced us to the neighborhood Mr. Bin Laden called home for possibly the last 6 years. Sure his proximity to the Pakistani military academy has been noted as has his proximity to the town’s golf course, but playing around with Google Maps and Earth has revealed a neighborhood not much different from our own.

Al-Baik Fried Chicken

Al-Baik Fried Chicken (albaik.com)


There is the local market where Bin Laden’s entourage would shop for their necessities. He may have declared a holy war against America, but when it came to the Cola War’s it seems he and his posse remained neutral favoring equally Coke and Pepsi.

There is an AMC Cinema Hall just a short mile from his compound. One wonders if he ever snuck out to the movies. Perhaps to see “Fahrenheit 9/11″ when he needed a good laugh. Pity anyone sitting behind him and trying to see the screen. I have to drive 15 minutes to my nearest theater and a half an hour for the first really decent one.

There are many nearby hotels, including the Hotel City Centre. I listed this one because it was the only one I could find with pictures. It has a variety of rooms, a conference room, and a banquet area. It also has a mall on the first floor. Heck the town I live in does not even have a hotel. Our closest thing to a hotel is the Holiday Inn the next town over and their only shopping provided is the Adult Bookstore adjacent to their parking lot.

There look to be many stores located up and down the nearby highway but not all were listed with Google. I managed to find listings for a coffee shop called Coffity, Al-Baik Fried Chicken, and Milano Pizza among others. There are computer firms and schools all over the town. There are parks and sporting fields. No baseball or football, but Soccer and what looks like a very nice Cricket field.

Far from a cave in the middle of nowhere, Mister Bin Laden spent his last years living in a neighborhood, a typical suburban neighborhood. A neighborhood unaware of just who their most famous neighbor was. Unaware that was, until the helicopters showed up to clean up their neighborhood.

In Action Comics #900, which came out yesterday, there is a short tale where Superman announces he is going before the United Nations to renounce his U.S. citizenship. Say it isn’t so Superman. The man of steel is turning his back on truth, justice, and the American way? This seems to be the conclusion a lot of people out there are jumping to, but within the context of the story it is not the case.

Superman - Ryan Amos (CC)

Superman - Ryan Amos (CC)


The story focuses on Superman deciding to support protesters in Iran, by standing with them for 24 hours. Not saying or doing anything, but standing there to support them and their cause. Iran takes this as an act of war on the part of the United States. So now Superman is being held accountable by our government for his actions.

Denouncing his citizenship is not a decision he makes because he is turning his back on the ideals he has always stood for, far from it. He just sees his thinking as having been too small, and that the the world today is too connected for him to be seen as a symbol of a single nation.  Superman, in the story, is trying to come to grips with his role in the modern world and look at the bigger picture.

I need to disclose at this point that I work in a comic shop, and have collected comics fairly seriously for almost 30 years. I support the creators who made the bold decision to send Superman, the character, in this possibly controversial direction. I already had one customer call me today irate over hearing the news, and told him to give the story a look to see if it changed his opinion.

At the heart of the character, Superman has always been portrayed as a man, yes a super man, but as a man first, trying to do the right thing. He has always stood for “Truth, Justice, and the American Way”.  Now he is just trying to make a stand for truth and justice on a global scale. More power to him, not that he needs it. He is Superman after all.

Louis J. Marinelli once loudly and vehemently opposed gays and lesbians from having the right to marry. He opposed it so strongly that he, according to his own blog, organized the 2010 Summer for Marriage Tour for the National Organization for Marriage. He organized rallies and started Facebook groups. Then something happened, Marinelli had a change of heart.

Wedding Ring - Eivind Barstad Waaler (CC)

Wedding Ring - Eivind Barstad Waaler (CC)

He realized over time that he supported civil marriage equality. He realized that gays and lesbians were not out to destroy American culture, they were just real people who wanted the same rights to participate in it as the rest of us. I commend him for having the courage to stand up to those he once supported, and to apologize to those he once attacked. I also commend him for commenting on the difference between civil marriage and holy matrimony.

He summed it up clearly and eloquently by saying “Once you understand the great difference between civil marriage and holy marriage, there is not one valid reason to forbid the former from same-sex couples, and all that is left to protect is the latter.”

Some may challenge Marinelli’s right to continue to call himself a conservative, but I consider myself a conservative and I agree with him. Being conservative is not a matter of religion, and those that see that it is have hijacked the term for their own use. Being conservative is also not a matter of discrimination, bigotry, or denying individuals their right to equality under law.

Arguments against civil marriage equality are impossible to make without religion entering the argument. If religion is the only basis for the argument, then a little thing called the First Amendment comes into play. Our government has no right to deny civil equality of any kind based only on religious arguments. People are guarantee the freedom of religion, but they are also guaranteed freedom from religion.

Marinelli had a change of heart, but it will take a lot more hearts to change before there is any chance of national civil marriage equality, especially if you take into account recent polls in Mississippi about GOP voters’ views on interracial marriage, marriage equality still has a long way to go.

President Obama’s Oval Office Address to the nation on Tuesday evening was a lot of talk about the problem, but no real solution. For the first two thirds of the speech, when he talked about the clean up, he seemed distant and may have contradicted himself. When he talked about clean energy being the future it seemed like it was the same old big dreams song I had heard before. Obama, like former President Jimmy Carter, is big on dreams and long term goals, but weak on immediate solutions.

Calling together panels of experts to solve the problem of the spill is all well and good, but 8 weeks later still not having a solution is unacceptable. The American people expect results, not committee meetings to further discuss possible strategies for reducing the leak. If another 8 weeks go by without that leak being shut down, then Obama’s numbers may never recover.

Saying BP will pay is nice, but making them pay long term is a much more complicated matter. An escrow account is a good start, but is 20 billion enough? Do we even have a clue yet of the final cost? What happens when BP decides enough is enough?

Using this disaster to push for alternative energy would be nice, but he talked about wind energy and other alternatives none of which really deal with what we use oil for. Oil is mainly for cars, Mr. President. What are we going to run them on? Not the hybrids or the smart cars, but all the cars that belong to people too broke from the recession to afford the new vehicles even if they were readily available.

A Gulf Coast Restoration Plan is nice, but again this is a long term goal not a short term solution. The reaction coming from those who make their living from the Gulf is that we do not need plans, but solutions. Counting days no longer matter when the root of the problem has still not been solved.

Carter faced a different oil crisis, but his lack of leadership and solutions in that time is being mirrored in this time by the current administration. We need solutions, not dreams. We need prompt results, not long term planning. We need leadership that we can get behind now, not hope that change will come some time. We were promised change, but not from bad to worse.

It is not easy being Alvin Greene, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate from South Carolina. There are numerous questions, controversies, and even conspiracy theories surrounding his unlikely win in the primary last week. The media and politicians from both sides have questioned everything from his moral character to his mental capacity to run a campaign. Even with his win in the primary, he seems like the loser in this political game.

Greene is unemployed. He was kicked out of the military after 13 years last August because “things just weren’t working”. He lives in his father’s home, with no cell phone and no computer. None of this shouts political ambition.

Greene is facing felony obscenity charges. He was caught on video showing allegedly obscene photos from a website to a female victim at the University of South Carolina. These charges were filed before he through his hat into the political arena. He is being represented by a public defender because he claimed to be unable to afford his own attorney.

Greene funded his “campaign” himself. According to reports he originally tried to pay the $10,400 needed to get his name on the ballot with a personal check. He returned a few hours later with a check from his campaign account. Questions have been raised on where he got the money from, but he is adamant that it was his own money.

Greene is not the most eloquent speaker. His way of speaking has lead both interviewers and members of his own party to question his mental health. One democratic representative who spoke with Greene said that if he were his client he would ask for a mental evaluation. Something just seems off about his reactions to this entire situation.

Greene has almost no campaign support. No campaign staff. No office. No advertisements of any kind. He does not even have a website. Of course he would need to buy a computer to look at it anyway.

Greene has no party support. Leadership of the Democratic party have asked him to step down. They are not supporting him at all, but some are going so far as accusing him of being a Republican plant. Even if he was a plant that still does not explain how he got the votes. The scale of the conspiracy required to get him on the ballot and then get him the votes needed to win is unrealistically epic in scope.

The late Andy Warhol once said that in the future everyone would be famous for 15 minutes. Mr. Greene your clock is running. I hope you survive the experience. It is not going to get any easier to be you any time soon.

“Who are you? Who are you?” No this is not the start of a CSI episode, or a Who concert, but the mantra repeated over and over again by Rep. Bob Etheridge (D-NC) in the course of his assault on a “student” who asked him nothing more than “Do you fully support the Obama agenda?” he says “Who are you?” or “Tell me who you are?” over 10 times in the course of the 1 minute 11 second video version I saw. In fact he does not say much else.

His actions spoke louder than his words. He acted like a fed up celebrity confronting a paparazzi, but he is not. He is an elected official, a public servant, and nothing justifies his grabbing the individual questioning him by the arm, knocking the camera out of his hand, or grabbing him by the neck. He acted like he had been threatened, insulted, or generally accosted. He was not. The individual addressed him respectfully and asked him a simple question. It was not personal, controversial, or even rude.

Questions have been raised over whether the individual is indeed a student as he portrayed himself, but this is really irrelevant. It serves as an attempt to spin it so that if the individual was being deceptive then Etheridge’s actions were somehow justified. No matter who the individual was the representative’s reaction was violent, excessive, and likely criminal. Nobody has the right to assault someone else no matter what the spin.

Whether DC authorities will have the nerve to take it as far as criminal prosecution remains to be seen, but I would doubt that they do. If this action were taken by a tea party attender or any other common citizen, I bet their treatment would be much different if also caught on video. Rank, as they say, has its privilege but some ranks come with responsibility and rules of behavior.

I would ask the representative who he was. Is he above the law? Is he setting a good example? Is he upholding the standard of his office? No, no and most definitely no.

The current controversy surrounding the Texas board of education and their attempts to rewrite history with an extreme right wing evangelical spin brings to mind the words of writer Robert A. Heinlein, who said “It is a truism that almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.” At the center of this controversy is Cynthia Dunbar, an evangelical Christian, lawyer, and author, and a member of the Texas Board of Education. She has proven willing to use her power to force her extreme religious views into the Texas educational curriculum, even when her beliefs do not match with historical accuracy, or to put it bluntly the truth.

Dunbar firmly believes the United States was founded on Christian principles – a belief likely reinforced by her education at Regent University School of Law, Pat Robertson’s university. Her invocation for Friday’s Board of Education meeting began with, ““I believe no one can read the history of our country without realizing that the Good Book and the spirit of the savior have from the beginning been our guiding geniuses.” She also stated the founding fathers had the intent of creating “a Christian land governed by Christian principles.” In her book, One Nation Under God (Onward, 2008), she states the founding fathers created “an emphatically Christian government.”

If the founding fathers were driven to create a Christian government, as Dunbar believes, then why would they have lead a revolution against the prior government? Revolution against the government is against biblical teachings. In Romans 13:1 the apostle Paul wrote “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities; for there is no authority except from God, and those authorities that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore whoever resist authority resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment.” Until the American revolution, authority to govern came from God, but the founding fathers saw the authority coming from reason instead.

The founding fathers were men of the Enlightenment – the era of philosophical awakening – a term Dunbar tried to remove whenever possible. They were men of reason not superstition. Quite a few were Deists, not Christian. Deists believe that a supreme being created the universe, that religious truth can be found through reason and observation, and denies the need for faith or organized religion. Reason was the litmus test for government, not that government be held to a “biblical litmus test” as Dunbar holds.

To put the thought of a Christian nation to rest once and for all one need look no further than the Treaty of Tripoli from 1796. Article XI of the treaty states “The government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion.” There it is plain and simple. Should be enough to convince anyone, but not Dunbar. Even though Thomas Jefferson helped draft it during George Washington’s presidency, and John Adams signed it, that is still not enough for her.

Thomas Jefferson seems to be a problem to Dunbar for several reasons. She would see him marginalized if not outright vilified for coining the term “separation of church and state.” She has claimed the separation of church and state is a myth. To her this is not the intent of the first amendment. Her belief system, outlined in her book, would go to the extreme as to “require that any person desiring to govern have a sincere knowledge and appreciation for the Word of God in order to rightly govern.” This requirement for Christian knowledge would be in direct contradiction to the Constitution which says in Article VI, section 3 that “no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.”

Dunbar also finds fault with the public school system, a system Jefferson helped found, and a system she was elected to serve. She goes so far as to refer to public education system as a “subtly deceptive tool of perversion.” She goes on to call the creation of public schools unconstitutional, even “tyrannical”. She say this is because they threaten the rights of the family, as granted by God in the scriptures, to control the education of their children. Her own children were home schooled and sent to private schools, rather than sending them to public schools which to her would be “throwing them into the enemy’s flames.”

One need only read the first 2 pages of her book to see her inability to separate her beliefs from the reality of a situation. She compares modern America to Nazi Germany before the Holocaust. She then says targeted group, the unfortunate “chosen people”, this time would be “devout, Bible-believing Christians.” She then say they are the only group in the United States it is acceptable to malign. This shows how far her beliefs are out of touch with reality, so far that they border on the paranoid.

Do not write her off as extremist, a radical, or paranoid. She may be all three of these things, but to write her off would ignore the most dangerous thing about her. She has power. Power over the education and futures of 4.8 million Texas schoolchildren. Power over possibly millions more in other states forced to follow the lead of Texas. Power to strike a blow for the extreme evangelical right, far beyond the beliefs of most conservatives. Make no mistake, she is dangerous. Her beliefs make it clear that she supports the idea of an evangelical Christian theocracy. Pretty sure that is not what the founding fathers had in mind.

“Dear Lord, This year you took my favorite actor, Patrick Swayzie. You took my favorite actress, Farrah Fawcett. You took my favorite singer, Michael Jackson. I just wanted to let you know, my favorite president is Barack Obama. Amen”

This “prayer”, currently circulating on Facebook, is a variation on the one e-mailed by New Jersey teacher’s union representative Joseph Coppola about that state’s governor, Chris Christie ,during a conflict over proposed education cutbacks. In his apology Coppola stated, “While it was intended as a joke I recognize that it was in poor taste, bad taste and was definitely an error of poor judgment and I sincerely apologize to the governor.” That apology was issued after the message was sent to 17,000 union members. Currently on Facebook 1,183,063 people have read this message and clicked that they like this statement and that number is growing.

For those unfamiliar with Facebook, most posts, statements, or links come with a Like button that you can click to show approval, support, or general agreement. The fact that well over a million people have shown support for this statement is frightening. Defenders of this statement may try and excuse it as a joke, but the fact that it is worded as a prayer makes it no laughing matter.

Prayer is sacred to a number of religions. Joking about prayer should be troubling to a number of people. The recent controversy over South Park and Mohammad illustrates the problems that can arise when humor and religion are at odds. This “prayer” would be at odds with several religions, but since the “prayer” begins with “Dear Lord,” it brings to mind Christianity first and foremost.

Christians willing to support a prayer calling on God to “take” the president is an act of hypocrisy. Christianity does not need any more attention for hypocrisy. Christians that are Pro-Life and Pro-Death Penalty do that well enough already. No matter who the statement is about, and no matter how the individual may feel about their politics, this “prayer” stands at odds with Christian teachings and beliefs. Invoking the Lord in this “joke” qualifies as taking the Lord’s name in vain. One commandment broken. Another commandment says something about not killing. Asking the almighty to do it for you? Probably sacrilege at best.

What is the truth behind the sentiment of this message? Would those who supported this statement be upset at the death of Barack Obama, or thankful for answered prayers? To publicly support a “prayer” calling upon the almighty to take the president’s life borders on sedition. Threats against the life of any president, no matter how veiled, are no joking matter.

The New Jersey Education Association, the states largest teacher’s union, is locked in battle with Governor Chris Christie over his proposal that they take a one year pay freeze and contribute 1.5% of their salaries toward paying for their own benefits package to which they currently contribute nothing.  The concessions would prevent cuts in language and art education and in cutbacks to the school lunch program.  Eleven of the local unions have already agreed to the concessions, but the central union leadership continues to block the plan.

I have no great love of teacher’s unions.  During my senior year of high school we had two unions each claiming they were the union of record for my district.  One union called for a strike, the other did not.  What ensued was a chaotic mess of half the teachers striking, while the others remained in school teaching.  My mother, as a substitute teacher and member of the union still teaching, crossed the picket lines.  Everyday going into school I would be yelled at by teachers on the picket lines who were well aware of this fact.  Needless to say it was not a great experience.

I do, however,  have great respect for teachers.  My mother is 73 years old and still substitutes as many days a year as she can.  She also tutors over a dozen kids in the evening.  Over twenty years ago she started tutoring for ten dollars an hour.   All these years later and she still has never raised her rates.  Teaching to my mom is not about the money.  Teaching is about teaching.  Being a teacher is who she is.

It is my feeling that if you asked individual teachers they would, even if somewhat begrudgingly, consent to the concessions.  They would be saving the jobs of co-workers and preserving the integrity of programs for their students.  To confirm my suspicions, I talked to a close friend who is a third grade teacher, and her sentiment was that her union would be upset and fight it, but that she herself would be thankful in this time to still have a job and the benefits.  She said she does not currently contribute to her benefits, but even she realized this was becoming rarer and rarer.

The union bosses are the ones blocking the concessions.  One union representative has gone so far as sending a “joke” memo hinting God should take the life of the governor.  Wonder what message that sends to students? Wonder if the union members during that strike forgot they were still teachers when they came back off the picket lines?   That is my biggest problem with teacher’s unions, when the union becomes more important than the teaching.

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